Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid Urges B’nai Brith to Embrace Human Rights for All

May 18, 2007

The Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid was surprised to see a press release issued by B’nai Brith Canada (dated 17 May 2007) characterizing the national campaign to boycott Chapters Indigo bookstores as a “misguided attempt to delegitimize the Jewish State of Israel and its supporters”.

The boycott of the Chapters Indigo book chain was launched at the end of 2006 by the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid in response to the establishment of the “Heseg Foundation for Lone Soldiers” by the book chain’s majority owners. Heseg distributes scholarships and support to former “lone soldiers” - individuals with no family in Israel who choose to serve in the Israeli military. As Israeli soldiers, they are responsible for enforcing the occupation of Palestinian land and numerous well-documented human rights abuses.

CAIA notes that B’nai Brith purports to be the “Jewish community’s foremost human rights agency”. It is surprising indeed, that their embrace of “human rights” extends to a defence of the Israeli military – an organization that has been noted by almost every human rights organization on the planet as responsible for egregious and decades long violations of human rights. CAIA poses a simple question to B’nai Brith: exactly what would the Israeli military have to do to warrant their condemnation for human rights abuses?

B’nai Brith’s attempt to sanitize Heseg and the support given by the majority owners of Chapters Indigo to this foundation confounds the basic principles of human rights. CAIA notes, according to the Jerusalem Post on 22 November 2006, that at a ceremony honoring a Lone Soldier killed during Israel’s attacks on Lebanon “Levine’s platoon commander handed Levine’s firearm to Canadian business duo and philanthropists Gerry Schwartz and Heather Reisman, the financial backers of the Heseg project.” Israel’s invasion of Lebanon killed over 1000 Lebanese civilians and attempted to reduce the country to rubble. What kind of “philanthropic” activity sees the owners of a book chain awarded a gun used in the attempted destruction of a country? Is B’nai Brith concerned with the fact that Heseg’s board of advisors includes Doron Almog, former head of Israeli forces in the Gaza Strip who was in charge of Israeli military command when a one-ton bomb was dropped on a house in Gaza killing 14 civilians, including nine children - an individual for which a warrant for suspicion of war crimes was issued in Britain? Or that other high-ranking Israeli military personnel serve on the board of advisors to this “philanthropic” organization?

Furthermore, it is ironic that B’nai Brith – a supposed human rights organization – decries attempts to “delegitimize the Jewish State of Israel”. This week, Palestinians commemorate the 59th anniversary of Al Nakba (the catastrophe) that saw the expulsion of three-quarters of the Palestinian population from their land in 1948. At least 20% of Israel’s population is non-Jewish. CAIA is opposed to any state that defines itself on the basis of one ethnicity or religion. We wholeheartedly support the right of all Israeli citizens to full equality regardless of their religion, ethnicity or nationality. It is for this reason that we are part of a global campaign against Israeli apartheid that includes boycott, divestment, and sanctions in the manner of the campaign that helped isolate and end South African apartheid.

We challenge B’nai Brith to publicly announce their support for the human rights of all people, including Palestinians, and join us in the campaign to boycott Israeli apartheid. First and foremost, B’nai Brith should endorse the national day of action against Chapters Indigo that will be happening outside bookstores across the country on June 9th. More information can be found at www.caiaweb.org.

Judge blaming Rachel Corrie for her own death highlights Israel’s impunity, family says

The Haifa District court ruled earlier today that the Israeli military is not responsible for killing American activist Rachel Corrie, and that Corrie was to blame for her own death.

“Even when she saw the mount of earth moving towards her, she did not move away. The accident was caused by the deceased,” said Israeli Judge Oded Gershon, as he read out a summary of the 62-page ruling in front of a packed courthouse and with Rachel’s mother Cindy, father Craig and sister Sarah sitting in the front row.